Weekly Commentary with New Orleans Magazine’s Errol Laborde

From Burlesque to Bingle: A New Orleans Story

One man gets the credit for the making of the New Orleans Christmas icon.

Errol Laborde

Oscar Isentrout was a puppeteer. Neither Isentrout’s name nor his presence were well-known while he lived, but he gave both voice and character to a figure who became part of the city’s Christmas lore.

Isentrout’s career in New Orleans began on Bourbon Street. His puppet act involved some risque marionettes who actually performed a strip show. It was hardly the career to suggest the making of a local yule legend. But then one day in the late 1940s, he was approached by Emile Aline, the display director at the nearby Maison Blanche Department store on Canal Street. Aline had visited Chicago where he noted that Marshall Field's department store had developed a snowman-like marionette that was used for Christmas window displays. Isentrout was hired to create a New Orleans version. From what was intended to be a marketing tool to promote toys to kids came an elfin snowman with holly wings, a cherry nose, and an inverted ice cream cone for a hat. In one hand he clutched a peppermint candy cane. What to call this character became a subject of debate. A store executive insisted that he should have the same initials as the business, MB. Heads huddled; a decision was made: The character was named “Mr. Bingle.”

Far more than a window display, by the 1950s with television and a generation of post-war baby boomers both in their infancy, Bingle became one of the city’s first local TV celebrities. Each evening during the Christmas season he had his own show, a 15 minute dinner-time romp involving a skit or two plus sales pitches for the toys at Maison Blanche. Isentrout developed a Bingle voice that was nasal, squeaky and kid-friendly. Bingle’s theme song, “Jingle, jangle, jingle, here comes Mr. Bingle, with a message from Kris Kringle ... ” became the anthem of the New Orleans Christmas.

A company called Cities Stores owned Maison Blanche at the time of Bingle’s creation. With each successive owner, Bingle seemed to grow in stature. When the Baton Rouge-based Sternberg family, owner of Godchaux’s department stores, bought the chain, they took great care to assure that Bingle was part of their marketing future. Arkansas-based Dillard's department stores, which eventually took over the Maison Blanche legacy, has incorporated Bingle into its Christmas marketing.

Behind the corporate wrangling is the soul of Isentrout who gave Bingle the quality that seemed to charm people.

It was an unlikely contribution from a meek, unassuming, loner, sometimes cantankerous little man. His life would eventually evolve almost entirely around Bingle. He worked from a studio at the Maison Blanche store on the West Bank. While playing classical music in the background, he would labor on the puppets and he would design sets for the upcoming holiday season. Away from the studio his favorite hangout was La Famille, a former Greek restaurant near the downtown Maison Blanche where Bingle had begun. His career path from burlesque to Bingle had rambled largely through the streets of the Quarter. In July 1985, that path came to an end.

There was no money to cover Isentrout’s funeral expense, so the Sternbergs stepped in and provided for his burial. Only a few people gathered at the Hebrew Rest Cemetery #3 on Pelopidas Street for the burial service. Those in attendance were mostly people who worked for Maison Blanche. But there was one stranger in the group. He stood quietly until an appropriate moment when he stepped forward and placed an object on top of Isentrout’s coffin. Then he walked away. None of those there knew who the person was. What had he left? A peppermint candy cane.

If logic did not prevail, it might seem magical that someone as unlikely as Isentrout became so entwined with Christmas in New Orleans. The man made Bingle, but in the end, Bingle made the man.

BOOK ANNOUNCEMENT: Errol’s Laborde’s new book, Mardi Gras: Chronicles of the New Orleans Carnival (Pelican Publishing Company, 2013), has been released. It is now available at local bookstores and online.

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Weekly Commentary with New Orleans Magazine’s Errol Laborde

about

Errol Laborde holds a Ph.D. in political science from the University of New Orleans and is the editor-in-chief of Renaissance Publishing. In that capacity he serves as editor/associate publisher of New Orleans Magazine and editor/publisher of Louisiana Life magazine.

Errol is also a producer and a regular panelist on Informed Sources, a weekly news discussion program broadcast on public television station WYES-TV, Channel 12. Errol is a three-time winner of the Alex Waller Award, the highest award given in print journalism by the Press Club of New Orleans. He also received the National and City Regional Magazine Association Award for Best Column for his New Orleans Magazine column, beating out 76 city magazines across the country. In 2013, Errol received the award for the "Best News Affiliated Blog," awarded by the Press Club of New Orleans.

Errol’s most recent books are Krewe: The Early Carnival from Comus to Zulu and Marched the Day God: A History of the Rex Organization. In his free time he enjoys playing tennis and traveling with his wife, Peggy, to anywhere they can get away to, but some of his favorite spots are the Caribbean and historic locations around Louisiana. You can reach Errol at (504) 830-7235 or errol@myneworleans.com.